The London Quarterly Review, Volume 15Theodore Foster, 1817 |
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Page 13
... army , afterwards as a lieutenant in the Regiment Dauphin - Cavalerie , from which he retired in disgust ( if General Turreau may be believed ) because he was refused a com- pany . At this time he was about forty years of age , and ...
... army , afterwards as a lieutenant in the Regiment Dauphin - Cavalerie , from which he retired in disgust ( if General Turreau may be believed ) because he was refused a com- pany . At this time he was about forty years of age , and ...
Page 21
... army had appre- hended . Four hundred Marsellois arrived to reinforce Quetineau ; their first business was to recommend a massacre of the prisoners , and in spite of the general's orders and the resistance of all the constituted ...
... army had appre- hended . Four hundred Marsellois arrived to reinforce Quetineau ; their first business was to recommend a massacre of the prisoners , and in spite of the general's orders and the resistance of all the constituted ...
Page 24
... army it was that Roche Jaquelein drove the enemy from Bres- suire , and performed his promise of delivering his friends . It was now determined that while the men of the family joined the army , the women and the aged should remove to ...
... army it was that Roche Jaquelein drove the enemy from Bres- suire , and performed his promise of delivering his friends . It was now determined that while the men of the family joined the army , the women and the aged should remove to ...
Page 25
... army kill his comrade ! The men immediately embraced each other . 6 When the agitation of the public mind in La Vendée first occu- pied the attention of the government , Petion proposed that a force should be sent there sufficient to ...
... army kill his comrade ! The men immediately embraced each other . 6 When the agitation of the public mind in La Vendée first occu- pied the attention of the government , Petion proposed that a force should be sent there sufficient to ...
Page 26
... army which Lescure had joined was under D'Elbée's command ; this was called the Grand Army : it consisted of Angevins , of Poitevins from that part which is adjacent to Anjou , and of the peasants whom Lescure had raised . Their usual ...
... army which Lescure had joined was under D'Elbée's command ; this was called the Grand Army : it consisted of Angevins , of Poitevins from that part which is adjacent to Anjou , and of the peasants whom Lescure had raised . Their usual ...
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Algiers Ali Bey ancient appear arms army Bashaw Bressuire called cause character Charette Chateaubriand chief Chinese Chinese language Christian circumstances death desert dreadful England English Euripides evil faith father favour Fazio feeling France French friends ground Guy Mannering habits hand head heart honour human inhabitants insanity instances Kaaba Khan king La Vendée labour language laws Lescure less Lord Mahomed Mahommedan Malcolm manner Marchioness means Mecca ment mind moral Morocco Mount Arafat mountains Mukran murdered Nadir Shah nation nature never object observed peasants Persia person poor possession Pottinger present prince principles prisoners racter readers reign religion republicans respect Roche Jaquelein royalists says Shah Shah Nameh Sidi slaves sovereign spirit sultan supposed Tangiers thing thousand tion town traveller Tripoli troops Vendeans Vendée Wahabees whole women γὰρ καὶ